
One of the things I asked residents when first visiting Arizona was, “Have you ever seen a rattlesnake while hiking?” Although I’d lived in Alabama and Texas, and these states had unique species of rattlesnakes, thankfully, I never came across one.
I did encounter a water moccasin in Soapstone Creek near Selma, Alabama, as a kid. It was coming after me until an adult yanked my body to safety. A bite from a water moccasin can be deadly.
The number one inquiry regarding many years of living in Alaska is, “Did you hunt and fish?” The answer to that has always been quite short when it comes to hunting, with me saying I did when I was younger.
I never went into detail, although the three hunts I went on are most unusual. I doubt any seasoned Alaskan hunter, or Arizonaan for that matter, can top them for strangeness!
My first hunt was in 1968. It entailed six of us loading into a car during winter, with our rifles, some snacks, a few sodas, and no real survival gear. The hunting crew consisted of me, my brother, friends Bob Malone and Chuck Staley, Dad, and his coworker. Sixpack comes to mind here because there were six of us packed into the old man’s 1965 Ford Galaxie.
Driving through the night, in the early-morning hours just as the sun was rising, near Eureka, we came across a large herd of caribou. With other hunters scaring them away, Dad’s friend suggested that we drive up around a bend, hoping the animals would reappear. He was correct in his analysis.
Quickly pulling out his 30.06 semiautomatic Remington from the trunk, my father popped several rounds off before the rest of us could get to our guns. He managed to down two. The bulk of the morning was then spent skinning them and loading them into the car.
Some of the meat was strapped to the roof, with the attachment rope tied inside the vehicle after being looped through partially open windows. It was not your typical Alaskan hunting trip, and undoubtedly would be considered illegal these days.
Hunt number two was also in 1968, but in the fall, not winter. I was 14 at this time. A good friend, Jeff Cloud, was asked to go on a sheep-hunting trip by what I believe was a family relative, perhaps an uncle. I can no longer recall the guy’s name.
Jeff invited me to tag along with the man’s approval. We drove to Knik River near Palmer with a lightweight aluminum canoe and motor. The boat was in the back of this man’s pickup along with the outboard.
Driving along an old road or trail as far back as we could, the canoe was offloaded and placed in the water. Having no life vests, the three of us climbed in and began a slow journey upriver, stopping at what I believe was Jim Creek. From there, we either rode in or pushed this vessel as far as we could, much of it through muck and swamp, until we could go no longer.
Hiking from that point on, several miles, we eventually set up camp and prepared to strike out early the next morning for some mountain peaks. Things got strange that night, with this adult asking Jeff to give him a massage, and then asking me. We both pretended to be asleep and didn’t hear him.
Evidently, our rebuff angered this fellow, because when we woke up, he was crass and mean toward us. After eating a light breakfast of Pop-Tarts and soda, we started hiking once again.
Several hours later, we came upon a bull moose, with Jeff’s supposed uncle downing him with one shot. A second round was fired just to make sure. This caught me off guard because I believed we were hunting solely for sheep.
Successfully skinning the creature, darkness came fast, with wind off the Knik Glacier chilling us to the bone. Without our tent or sleeping bags, that night was spent trying to keep a fire going and trying to stay warm under the man’s emergency blanket.
Remembering what had happened the previous day, Jeff and I reluctantly lay side by side with this fellow, while his four-foot-by-five-foot quilted-aluminum blanket barely afforded us protection. It was either endure that or suffer hypothermia as my teeth were chattering.
Sometime during the night, we were awakened by bears trying to get the meat. Two of them were evidently fighting over who got first dibs. They were fiercely roaring at one another. Firing a few shots into the air to scare them off, a rope was then used to pull the moose meat high into a tree. That worked, but I never slept the rest of the evening.
As if that wasn’t the worst of it, after backpacking this heavy meat back to the boat, we loaded it in, once again pulling the loaded dinghy through swamp and muck. Finally arriving at the Knik River, dog-tired, the three of us climbed in, water coming up to the gunwales. That’s the top of the vessel for those unfamiliar with boat lingo. Miraculously, we made it to the truck.
Jeff’s uncle never said a word to us on the drive home, which was fine with me. I never saw him again and didn’t want to. I also never received any meat, despite the labor I gave forth in hauling it out. That was fine as well, because to this day I dislike the taste of moose. Give me a ribeye steak from a Texas steer any day.
Hunt number three, and my last, took place in the winter of 1973. It was January, with my brother and I planning to go on a caribou hunt in Nabesna, Alaska, using my 1954 Chevrolet to get there.
We jointly owned a Rupp snowmachine, but since we had no trailer to haul it, we rented one from a local tool dealer. Piling everything that we needed into this car and hitching up our trailer to the bumper, we set off for Nabesna, some 300 miles away.
Very close to our destination, Jim looked back and noticed smoke coming from one side of the trailer. Stopping to take a look, one of the trailer wheel bearings had gone bad. Tearing things apart, we attempted to remedy the problem by using a soda can. It worked for about three miles before failing.
With it well below zero, snowing, and no traffic on the highway at that time of the year, we decided to unhook the trailer and ditch it. My brother drove the snowmachine while I followed. We eventually made it back to Tok, where we got a needed motel room.
Leaving the Rupp there, a trucker we met in a local café offered to pick up our rental trailer and bring it to Tok for free. Driving back to Anchorage and getting a larger trailer, we headed back to Tok, loaded up both the snowmachine and the first trailer, and eventually made it to Anchorage.
All in all, we drove 1200 miles in an antique car, in inclement weather, for nothing other than memories. That was my final hunting trip, where attempting to kill an animal was involved.
These days, I do my meat hunting at a supermarket meat counter, and my wild game hunting using a camera. I find the framed photos of a Dall sheep and a huge Alaskan wolf on my living room wall, taken by renowned photographer Eric Anderson, far more eye-appealing than the dust-laden heads of both creatures, stuffed with polyurethane, foam, and resin.
Some folks will disagree, and they’re inclined to do so. After all, this is America!


















